The subject seems simple and always the same: Achim Lippoth photographs children: children at dance school, in their room, playing at sports, in costumes. But the presentation and the expression of the little portraitees make the viewer take a closer look.

50 years after Robert Frank’s The Americans, the German photographer André Lützen sets off on his own odyssey through everyday life in America. His road movie takes us from Colorado to Mississippi, from the desert to subtropical climes – always carefully bypassing Hollywood.

In the photo sequence "Public Private Hanoi", André Lützen makes his way through the urban labyrinth of Hanoi by night. The city is restless, bustling, claustrophobic. Heat and cramped living quarters drive people onto the streets. Doors and windows are flung open wide. The private sphere overflows into the public space. The borderline between inside and outside dissolves.

»This book chronicles Legath's travels through Italy over the years 2005 to 2010. Legath's Italy is made up of barren and scorched landscapes that take this form perhaps only for a few weeks of the year.«

»What could an artist do with a cell phone camera?« This is the question artist Beth Lilly asked herself and her answer became an ongoing participatory art project. Loosely modeled on divination, she uses her cell phone to make photographs in exchange for a caller’s questions.